Chinese purchases of US colleges are raising聽听辞蹿听聽intrusion, threatening what may instead be relatively benign efforts at serving a Chinese customer base that reveres American higher education.
The acquisitions to date have involved small and financially distressed institutions, often in niche fields. In many cases the buyer either has no clear turnaround plan or sees the US campus largely as a supplemental appendage of a China-based campus.
叠耻迟听听颁丑颈苍补鈥檚听聽government, the purchases are routinely raising聽聽and outright opposition. One of the most recent examples involves Westminster Choir College in New Jersey, where students and staff have protested the sale of the financially troubled music academy to a Beijing-based owner.
An attorney representing Westminster alumni and donors pursuing a lawsuit to stop the sale has warned that Chinese government officials controlling Westminster would be given veto power over US norms of academic聽.
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Chinese buyers have made at least half a dozen other such purchases in recent years, also raising suspicions and criticisms. Outside experts on China and the sale of US colleges, however, said that the worries seem overwrought.
鈥淭here are a lot of聽聽to be聽聽about with Chinese government activities in the US,鈥 said Peter Lorentzen, an assistant professor of economics at the University of San Francisco who specialises in China. 鈥淏ut purchasing small, struggling educational institutions is really not one of them.鈥
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Beyond Westminster, other recent Chinese purchases in US higher education include the closed campuses of Dowling College in New York; Chester College of New England and Daniel Webster College, both in New Hampshire;聽and Virginia Intermont College and Saint Paul鈥檚 College, both in Virginia.
One still-operating institution, Bay State College in Boston, was bought late last year by Beijing-based Ambow Education Holding. In many of the other cases, the Chinese buyers of US campuses don鈥檛 appear to have immediate plans to reopen the properties as colleges, said Douglas Halladay, president of Halladay Education Group, which helps to arrange purchases of private schools and colleges in the US and Canada.
Chinese buyers more commonly see value in private boarding schools at the school level, Mr Halladay said. The Chester College buyer has converted its campus into an international school. It鈥檚 far harder, though, to win the accreditation needed to revive a college or to establish a new one on an existing property, Mr Halladay said. Only one of the Chinese-acquired former colleges,聽, is known to have a buyer hoping to open a new college on the site.
Given the obstacles around accreditation, Mr Halladay said, it鈥檚 hard to believe that the Chinese government would be pursuing the purchases of small, economically challenged US campuses primarily as a strategy for political proselytising.
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And it鈥檚 virtually inconceivable, Dr Lorentzen said, that the Chinese or any outside buyers would have a realistic hope of acquiring any intellectually influential US college or university.
鈥淎t the post-secondary level,鈥 Mr Halladay said, 鈥渋t鈥檚 kind of an interesting anomaly 鈥 they are buying as many empty institutions as they are buying functioning institutions. So it鈥檚 a head-scratcher in some ways.鈥
The clearest explanation of the Chinese purchases, Mr Halladay said, centres on Chinese聽聽of US higher education rather than any concerted Chinese interest in subverting it.
The Bay State College purchase is a strong example of what seems to be the model, he said. Bay State鈥檚 new owner, Ambow, has institutions in China where it hopes to provide students with their initial years of study before they finish their degrees in Boston.
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鈥淭hat鈥檚 a good business acquisition 鈥 it has synergy with its Chinese operations,鈥 Mr Halladay said. Rather than reflect a primary goal of political crusading, he said, the Chinese purchase of Bay State College 鈥渕akes business sense鈥.
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